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Renewing older school buildings A school district perspective. Aurora Public Schools Aurora, Colorado Presentation to CEFPI Southwest Regional Conference May 2012. Renewing older school buildings A school district perspective. About the Aurora Public Schools district
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Renewing older school buildings Aschool district perspective Aurora Public Schools Aurora, Colorado Presentation to CEFPI Southwest Regional Conference May 2012
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective • About the Aurora Public Schools district • Repair or replace, the decision process • Managing design and construction • Project examples Today’s Presentation
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective • About Aurora Public Schools • Brief history: The Aurora Public Schools district serves a heavily residential community on the eastern edge of Denver. Founded in 1885, the Aurora district remained essentially rural for the first 65 years of its history. Significant development began at the end of World War II and continued at a steady pace until the late 1980’s. Following a lull in the 1990s, growth resumed around 2001with the construction of an outer beltway through the undeveloped east of the district. • Student community: • Ethnicity: 54 % hispanic, 18 % white, 18 % black, 10 % all other • English as second language: 38 % (86 % Spanish speakers) • Free and reduced lunch: 69 % • Graduation rate: 55 % • Key facts: • 144 square miles • 60 % developed • 39,000 students • 27 % student growth since 2002 • Average age of school buildings: 28 years
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective • About Aurora Public Schools – facilities • 4.6 million square feet • $900 million replacement • Enrollment to capacity of major school types: • elementary : 102 % • p to 8 : 94 % • middle : 78 % • high : 88 % • Of 28 schools constructed in 1972 or earlier: • 16 replaced or remodeled (57 % ) • 3 replaced • 13 remodeled • 12 not yet remodeled (43 %)
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective • Setting the priority for school renewal and making the repair vs. replace decision: • The decision environment • Who decides ? • Factors that drive the decision
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective • The decision environment • The decision: • There is no ‘one size fits all’ formula to answer whether a school should be remodeled or replaced. Much depends on the district circumstances. The ‘right answer’ can be different even for two neighboring districts. • Key variables: • Backlog of schools in need of attention • Short and long term financial capacity of the district • Competing needs for capital funds • School and site specific factors
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective • Remodeled or replaced • two high schools • one 6 to 12 school • two middle schools • twelve elementary schools • Not remodeled • two high schools • four middle schools • fourteen elementary schools Aurora Public Schools Less than half of all schools more than 30 years old in 2012 have been remodeled. Accomplishments Needs Key Variable : Backlog of schools in need
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective • Competing needs • In the near term, there are many competing needs for capital construction funds. • Districts must balance the needs for school remodel or replacement against: • new schools to accommodate growth • major facility repairs • additions and renewal less extensive full remodels • rapidly expanding cost of information technology Key Variable : Competing needs
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective Key Variable : Financial constraints
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective Key Variable : Site specific
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective Who decides ? • Long Range Facilities Advisory Committee - primary responsibility for planning district bond programs • 18 members including: • School administrators • Teachers • Parents / community members • Support Staff • Local government officials • Role in selecting whole building remodels • Visit every school meeting age criteria • Review • building condition • functional evaluation • enrollment/ capacity data • Repair vs. replace ? (Construction staff input) • Vote list for recommendation to board of education • Final decision by board of education
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective • Repair or replace the decision process • Typical whole building remodel • Add 15 % to 25 % to building square feet • Budget equals about 50 % of replacement cost • Repair major systems as needed • Functionally improved to approach ed. spec. standard for a new school • Guided by site-based design advisory group • Budget driven
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective • Why we frequently favor remodel over replacement: • Limited funds stretch twice as far, this is the largest single factor • Strong community identification with an existing structure • Unless the need is very obvious, demolition can be perceived as wasteful • Housing the students during construction is a difficult problem: • Construction of the new school typically requires an entire school year • Our district lacks empty / low capacity school buildings • Most of our school sites are too small to build a new school next to the old
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective • Where replacement buildings were the better choice • Poor functional layout that didn’t offer opportunity for successful remodel • Existing school square footage needed to be expanded by more than 50 % to meet enrollment capacity target • Very small site required ‘going vertical’ to achieve necessary size
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective 30.6 % Replacements
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective • Managing the design process • Project Schedule – • 22 -24 months from project start to opening the remodeled school • 10 – 12 months from selection of architect to bid opening • Start design process in fall or early winter so that stakeholder meetings can be completed in the school year before the construction. • Design Development and/or Construction Document phases over the summer • Bid in the fall with General Contractor on board before Winter Break • Additions can start as early as Winter Break and proceed during the school year • Allow contractor downtime, late shifts or quiet activities during Standard Testing period in the spring. • Schedule some tasks over Spring Break in existing building. • Contractor given existing building following last day of school.
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective • Managing the design process • Stakeholder Meetings • Design Advisory Groups – Architect’s Design Team and District’s Project Coordinator meets with a stakeholder group at the school site to set a design concept that meets districts goals for the project. • District Team Meetings – Three project review meetings are held with Support Services stakeholders and the Design Team. • At the Schematic Design presentation all departments are invited to a presentation of the site’s design concept and to provide feed back. Any comments that affect the design solution are taken back to the Design Advisory Group. • Design Development and Construction Document review meetings allow Maintenance and Operations, IT, Nutrition Services, Transportation and Security to provide input on technical aspects of the project. A representative from the school staff will also attend.
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective • Managing the design process • Educational Specifications • District has developed Educational Specifications for new buildings. These are used as a guideline for remodels recognizing that not all standards can be met. • Templates – Educational Specifications are written for a standard capacity. Templates have been developed for schools of existing or projected capacity. • Classroom size – assuming existing classroom size is close to educational specifications, new classrooms match existing size not educational specifications. If dramatically undersized, small classrooms are repurposed or enlarged. • Budget limits how many spaces can be brought up to educational specifications. Design Advisory Group makes decisions on which spaces are most important.
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective • Managing the design process • Surprises • Code Issues – Area Separation walls vs adding a fire suppression system • Quality of archive drawings – Having a good archive room can make architects too comfortable • Discovery of items outside the walls of the existing building • Old foundations • Asbestos wrapped pipe • Underground electrical, low voltage wiring, gas lines • Project Contingency is important on a remodel project
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective • Construction contracting & process for remodels • Nine elementary school remodels (1997 to 2012) • Sealed bid award; restricted bidders list • Students remained on site during construction • Typical timelines • Projects bid in early fall (September / October) • Construction of additions starts in January • Some critical work at winter and spring break, evenings • Last day of school at end of April • Remodel old building (including asbestos abatement) • Completion in mid-July • School resumes first week in August
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective • Construction contracting & process for remodels • One high school and middle school • CM/GC with GMP; contractor selected at the end of SD • Students remained on site during construction • Multiple construction and asbestos abatement phases • Students relocated from construction zones: • For middle school, nine two-classroom mobiles brought on site as “swing space” • For high school new additions built first and used as “swing space”, plus only two mobiles needed • Construction duration: • 18 months for middle school • 30 months for high school
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective • Construction contracting & process for remodels • Construction Calendar • The district creates a calendar for schools being remodeled. Current model uses longer days and make changes to teacher workdays and in-service days to end school one month earlier than other schools in the district. Contractors receive the entire site for 2.5 months instead of 6 weeks. • Earlier version of Construction Calendar had students leaving two weeks earlier than the district calendar in the year before the summer work and coming back two weeks later. • Separating students from construction activities • Communicating to staff and parents particularly on the asbestos issue
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective • Construction contracting & process for remodels • Some surprises on remodel projects • Structural tie-ins to the existing building • Building department changes at time of permitting • Soils conditions not matching soils report • Phasing of new work with existing utilities • Enrollment changes between conception of project and construction
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective Project Examples
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective Paris Elementary Replacement • Replaced 17,989 sqft single-story with 48,000 three-story school • 2.3 acre site ! • Capacity increased from 216 to 413
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective Paris Elementary Replacement
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective Sable Elementary Remodel • Connected four campus-plan buildings • New media center • Partitioned 10,000 sqft open space building
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective Sable Elementary Remodel
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective Sixth Avenue Elementary Remodel • Added 14,000 square feet • New admin, media, kitchen/cafeteria • Increased capacity by 150 • Improved circulation & accessibility • Reoriented site for better access
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective Sixth Avenue Elementary Remodel
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective Aurora Hills Middle School Replacement • Replaced 1970’ s windowless, open space design with day-lit, LEED bldg • New school constructed next to old
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective Aurora Hills Middle School Replacement
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective Aurora Hills Middle School Replacement
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective West Middle School Remodel • Connected two buildings with kitchen/café, media center, classroom addn. • Preserved 1932, historic-status district original high school bldg.
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective West Middle School Remodel
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective Hinkley High School Remodel • Connected two buildings with central spine addition • Reorganized school in four small learning communities • New commons, office suite, media center
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective Hinkley High School Remodel
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective Final Thoughts • There is no single right answer to the remodel or replace question. A lot depends on unique district circumstances. • Your district renewal plan will be constrained by competing needs and the importance of maintaining a level of equity across the district. • Use a district level planning community including patrons, educators, staff and community members to set priorities. • Maintain tight budget control over remodels. • Allow and require the school design advisory group to make tradeoffs in determining remodel scope.
Renewing older school buildingsA school district perspective Final Thoughts • Ed. specs. may need to be adjusted for school size and unique programs. • Early and constant attention to schedule will save headaches and money. • Consider a “construction calendar” to add days to the summer. • An experienced remodel contractor is essential. We have had success bidding elementary remodels and replacement schools. CM/GC is definitely needed for more complex middle and high school remodels. • Always expect surprises on remodels. Budget adequate contingencies of both time and money.